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L I B R A R Y


Social Constructionism: How Meanings, Identities, and Social Realities Are Made Through Human Interaction
Abstract Social constructionism is one of the most useful ideas a student can meet early in the social sciences, and also one of the easiest to misread. This article explains, in plain language, the central claim of #social_constructionism: that much of what feels natural, fixed, or simply "real" about the social world is in fact built and held in place through #human_interaction. The paper is written for students and for the teachers who first introduce them to the idea. It
2 hours ago19 min read


Shared Leadership Theory: Understanding Leadership as a Collective Process and Explaining It to Students
bstract This article explains #shared_leadership as a way of thinking about leadership that treats the act of leading as something a whole team does together, rather than something one appointed boss does alone. Written mainly for students, teachers, and early-stage researchers, it sets out what the theory says, where it came from, and why it matters in classrooms, workplaces, hospitals, and project teams. The paper uses a #conceptual_review method, drawing together existing
3 hours ago18 min read


Applied Cultural Intelligence: From the Beating Heart of Dubai to the Future of the World
Abstract This article examines how a cultural institution can move the idea of cultural intelligence from theory into daily practice. It uses the Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid Centre for Cultural Understanding (SMCCU) in Dubai as a single case study, and it asks a simple question: what actually happens to people when an organisation is built to teach #cultural_understanding rather than just talk about it? The study uses a mixed-methods design. Survey responses from first-time an
4 hours ago18 min read


Charismatic Leadership Theory: How Personal Charm, Vision, and Emotional Appeal Shape Influence
Abstract Charismatic leadership theory tries to answer a puzzle that most students notice early in life: why do some people inspire deep loyalty, energy, and sacrifice while others with the same job title struggle to get anyone to follow them? This article explains the theory in plain language and then places it inside a wider social science conversation. It begins with the classic foundations laid by Max Weber and developed by later researchers such as Robert House, Jay Cong
4 hours ago17 min read


Serving First, Leading Second: A Student-Friendly Reading of Servant Leadership Theory Through Bourdieu, World-Systems, and Institutional Isomorphism
Abstract This article explains #servant_leadership theory in plain language for students while still treating it with the seriousness of a scholarly review. The central claim of the theory is simple to state and hard to practise: a true leader chooses to #serve_first, and the wish to lead grows out of that wish to serve. The paper traces the idea from Robert Greenleaf's original essays, through the ten behavioural traits popularised by Larry Spears, to the modern measurement
6 hours ago18 min read


Kotter's Change Model: Explaining Organizational Change Through Leadership, Urgency, Vision, and Step-by-Step Action for Students
This article examines John #Kotter's eight-step model of #organizational_change and presents it in a way that students can understand without losing the depth expected in serious academic work. Many learners find theories of change abstract and disconnected from the realities they will face in workplaces, so this study translates Kotter's framework into plain language while connecting it to broader #sociological and #institutional ideas. The article situates Kotter's model wi
1 day ago20 min read


Lewin's Change Theory: Describing Organizational Change Through Three Stages of Unfreezing, Changing, and Refreezing — A Pedagogical and Sociological Exploration for Students
This article examines Kurt #Lewin's three-stage model of #organizational_change and its enduring value as a teaching tool for students across management, education, nursing, and social science programs. The model describes change through three sequential phases: #unfreezing, #changing (or moving), and #refreezing. While the framework is often criticized for being simplistic, this study argues that its simplicity is precisely what makes it pedagogically powerful. Using a quali
1 day ago19 min read
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